• @Nevoic
    link
    English
    11 year ago

    You didn’t respond to anything I said. You essentially said “I agree and you’re wrong” with some fluff, so uhm okay good talk buddy.

    • @dx1
      link
      11 year ago

      I really don’t know why convos go this way.

      Consider more deeply the problem of how competing firms respond to prices. Consider that these firms don’t actually have monopolies over a single geographical area, and also that people would have the option to move somewhere else even if they did. When there is actual competition, the theory immediately breaks down, because sitting on stock without selling/renting it actually just wastes money, and any other competing provider will just slip in below the price you’re trying to sell it at.

      • @Nevoic
        link
        English
        11 year ago

        No people don’t “just have the option to move away”, that’s an incredibly naive way to look at the world, some people need to be in certain locations for social or work reasons.

        Also, what I’m saying isn’t a “theory”, it’s an observation of data. You keep trying to rationalize it away, but whatever way you slice it you can’t get rid of the 16 million vacant houses that are not in use, while we have half a million homeless people and rising costs housing costs.

        You seem to be insinuating that people don’t just buy up housing and sit on it, like that’s not a phenomenon that exists because you can’t fathom why, despite my last comment clearly outlining several reasons how it could happen, and more importantly the fact that it does actually happen.

        1. Monopolies in certain areas. Your response? “They can move”
        2. Holding onto vacant rent controlled apartments to force people into more expensive units. Your response? “It wastes money” (untrue, in this situation it makes more money, which is why it happens in the real world).
        3. There are 16 million vacant housing units while we have half a million homeless people. Your response? Nothing, I guess those people’s interests aren’t as important as preserving the right for housing scalpers to hoard unused property.
        • @dx1
          link
          1
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Also, what I’m saying isn’t a “theory”, it’s an observation of data. You keep trying to rationalize it away, but whatever way you slice it you can’t get rid of the 16 million vacant houses that are not in use, while we have half a million homeless people and rising costs housing costs.

          I am not trying to “rationalize it away”. This is a phenomenon that exists, a large stock of unused real estate. The question here is why it exists.

          Monopolies in certain areas. Your response? “They can move”

          You argued that there are localized monopolies. This is a contentious point already, so I pointed out a mitigating factor, that people (not all people, sure) have the option to move if such a monopoly became unbearable. You seem to want to frame this like I’m just dismissively telling people to move if housing is too expensive or whatever, but the point of bringing this up is to demonstrate one item in the long list of things that prevent your theoretical phenomena of “big players hoarding real estate to raise prices across the market” from occurring in the real world. And I really don’t appreciate trying to be depicted like I’m spouting alt-right viewpoints here, which I’m absolutely not.

          Holding onto vacant rent controlled apartments to force people into more expensive units. Your response? “It wastes money” (untrue, in this situation it makes more money, which is why it happens in the real world).

          This is circular reasoning. You’re citing your theoretical “hoarding real estate to raise prices” phenomena as proof that “hoarding real estate to raise prices” occurs.

          There are 16 million vacant housing units while we have half a million homeless people. Your response? Nothing, I guess those people’s interests aren’t as important as preserving the right for housing scalpers to hoard unused property.

          And right back to trying to smear me as “not caring about the homeless”.

          Again, the point here is to figure out why this phenomena of a big surplus of vacant property exists. Doing a thorough root cause analysis is how you actually solve the problem. Latching onto popular pseudoscientific talking points about the problem and ignoring any attempts to investigate the problem is how you guarantee the problem continues. And trying to smear people who want to figure out the nature of the problem is absolutely ass backwards.

          Gonna go ahead and disengage at this point, happy to actually discuss this if you want to do it intelligently and not adversarially.

          • @Nevoic
            link
            English
            1
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            You can’t tell someone they’re being pseudo-scientific and then accuse them of being adversarial as if you’re not.

            I wasn’t using circular reasoning, I was citing data. 90,000 rent controlled housing units in NYC are left vacant (this number has been rising). As we both understand, “individual” (either actually an individual or a corporation) capitalists act in their own best interests. They’re not leaving these apartments vacant for years just because they want to fuck over poor people, they’re doing it because they make more money off their other supply if these units are kept off the market.

            If you don’t want to feel like you’re spouting alt-right talking points, stop using verbatim the talking points that capitalists use to defend housing scalpers. At best, your entire point is “housing scalpers aren’t as big of a deal as this other problem”, and at worst you’re ignoring the real problem so capitalists can keep exploiting the housing market.

            You haven’t made a case in favor of housing scalpers, and for good reason, there’s literally no case to be made for them. The capitalist position is that scalping houses isn’t a big enough problem to have an effect on supply. Even if that were true (which would require 16 million housing units being vacant having no impact on housing supply), it doesn’t mean that it couldnt be true in the future. What if the number rose to 30 million vacant units with the same population? Or 100 million? Or a billion? At some point it gets ridiculous. To me that’s pretty clearly when you’re at “we have 30x as many vacant houses as homeless people”, but maybe your tolerance is much higher because homeless people aren’t economically valuable to capitalists (except as a reserve army of labor).

            • @dx1
              link
              11 year ago

              Alright dude, good luck with that.